XIII. Revivals and Recreations; The Sociology of Jazz By the early 1970s, as we have seen, jazz was in a state of stylistic chaos. This was one reason why the first glimmers of “smooth jazz” came about as both an antidote to fusion and an answer to “outside jazz.” But classical music was also in a state of chaos. The majority of listen- ers had become sick of listening to the modern music that had come to dominate the field since the end of World War II and had only become more abrasive and less communicative to a lay audience. In addition, the influx of young television executives in that period had not only led to the cancellation of many well-loved programs who they felt only appealed to an older audience demographic, but also the chopping out of virtually all arts programming. Such long-running programs as The Voice of Firestone and The Bell Telephone Hour were already gone by then. Leonard Bernstein had been replaced at the New York Philharmonic by Michael Tilson Thomas, an excellent conductor but not a popular communicator, and thus CBS’s “Young People’s Con- certs” no longer had the same appeal. In addition, both forms of music, classical and jazz, were the victims of an oil shortage that grossly affected American pressings of vinyl LPs. What had once been a high quality market was now riddled with defective copies of discs which had blis- ters in the vinyl, scratchy-sounding surfaces and wore out quickly. Record buyers who were turned off by this switched to cassette tapes or, in some cases, the new eight-track tape format. Some people bought new LPs and immediately put them on tape during the first play so that they could re-listen to them in the future without the annoying ticks, pops and hisses that would even- tually ensue. Interestingly, both types of music renewed their marketing vigor by turning the clock backwards. Classical music suddenly discovered “authentic performance practice,” soon to be- come “historically informed performances,” in the organ recordings of Helmut Walcha and the orchestral recordings of Baroque and Classical repertoire by such artists as Nikolaus Harnon- court, Gustav Leonhardt and Sigiswald Kuijken who stressed authentic (in their view) playing, especially of string instruments. In Kuijken’s case this included holding the violin against one’s shoulder rather than firmly under the chin, but in nearly all cases it also meant playing with no string vibrato. This practice, which came to be known as “straight tone,” eventually dominated the world of classical music so thoroughly that it now encroaches on all music of the 18th and 19th centuries and even some music of the 20th century. The problems with the use of straight tone is not that it wasn’t done to some degree in the 18th century, because it was. The problem is that it was not used consistently. Contemporary writers on artistic matters noted that they used a straight tone in fast passages because not having to apply vibrato meant you could play faster more easily (a fact which lately led violinist Gil Shaham to record the Bach Sonatas and Partitas for solo violin at fast speeds) but, as Leopold Mozart wrote, vibrato was certainly a “tool” avail- able to violinists. But Harnoncourt, and most latter-day conductors in the HIP tradition, have made it a form of religion to be obeyed blindly, which has led some listeners to accept it but many more to loathe it as unmusical and historically incorrect. In the jazz world something new was afoot, a conscious effort to authentically recreate the orchestral and group jazz of the 1920s and early ‘30s. As we have seen, the concept was not entirely new: Fletcher Henderson’s orchestra recorded Bill Challis’ arrangement for the Jean Goldkette band of Singin’ the Blues in 1931 as a paean to Bix Beiderbecke (Chapter III, item 0052); Paul Whiteman rerecorded Challis’ 1928 arrangement of San, with greater looseness of rhythm and swing, in 1945; and as we shall see, Goldkette himself revived the Don Murray- Irving Riskin-Bill Challis arrangement of My Pretty Girl in 1959 as well as recording for the first 334 time Challis’ arrangement of Dinah. But it is also true that by the time the latter recording was issued 1920s jazz was pretty much reduced to a pop-culture caricature. Enoch Light’s best- selling series of Roaring Twenties LPs, though using some original musicians such as Charlie Margulis and Chauncey Morehouse, simplified and streamlined the ‘20s sound to bring it more in line with contemporary pop arrangements, and “Dixieland” jazz was likewise slicked-up for TV programs and films.1 To a certain extent, some of this trend was checked in the 1960s when RCA Victor began issuing LPs of authentic Jazz Age music, both jazz and pop, on its Vintage label. Fred Waring’s Pennsylvanians, Paul Whiteman, George Olsen and his Music and the Coon-Sanders Nighthawks shared the same “Nostalgia” bins in the record stores with Jack Teagarden, Jelly Roll Morton, early Coleman Hawkins and Duke Ellington, Fats Waller and McKinney’s Cotton Pickers. Sud- denly, authentic music of the Jazz Age was available again, sold along with the early records of Louis Armstrong and Bix Beiderbecke which had already been available since the late 1950s. This sudden spate of reissues led to a series of what can only be called “recreation” bands. Most of these were small groups, imitating or reimagining the sextet or septet perform- ances of the 1920s, but as time went on temporary or permanent orchestras were created to play the scores of the earlier era more or less as they were written. There has been much debate as to the artistic validity of these groups. Indeed, I debated for quite a long time as to whether I wanted to write this chapter at all. In the eyes of many working jazz musicians, the “retro bands” aren’t really jazz because they’re not creating much of anything new. Most of them even play the origi- nal solos heard on the records note-for-note, which is what Rex Stewart did in his Beiderbecke tribute on Singin’ the Blues, while others play their own solos. (Some groups take a mixed ap- proach, using original short solos and “fills” within the arrangement but using original work for solos of eight bars or more.) Eventually I decided in favor of inclusion for one simple reason. Faithfully recreating jazz of an earlier era is, in itself, a form of “classicalization,” i.e. it makes these works from the past set pieces which are played over and over again, thus breeding a comfort level with audi- ences and establishing the music as classics in their own right. In addition to this, however, there is the fact that many musicians involved in the recreation process work really hard at what they do, almost to the point of fanaticism. They are obsessed with “getting it right,” sometimes, I am sad to say, to the point where the bounce and swing of the music suffers in their zeal for authen- ticity. I have heard much more than my share of bands that think they are getting it right but do not. More often than not, it’s the rhythm section that is stiff, mostly because modern-day musi- cians don’t have a natural knack for playing in a 1920s rhythmic feel. Their performances have what I call, uncharitably it is true, a “burpy-farty” sound about them. They sound like an old man grunting in the bathroom rather than the relaxed, loping beat that such musicians as Morton, Armstrong, the New Orleans Rhythm Kings and the Jean Goldkette band actually achieved back in the 1920s and early ‘30s. One of the anomalies of the new “moldy fig” crowd (although by “new” I am going back to the late 1970s) is that they not only play this style of jazz exclusively, and normally just the most popular or easy-to-assimilate styles (there are virtually no bands that will play the very complex arrangements of Fud Livingston or Don Redman), but also dress in ‘20s garb and often 1 Among them Pete Kelly’s Blues and Some Like it Hot, the latter of which stirred a brief interest in ‘20s music and led directly to Goldkette being hired by RCA Victor to make his “recreation” album. But ironically, aside from those two Bill Challis arrangements, the bulk of the album was comprised of uninteresting pseudo-‘20s arrangements by Sy Oliver, who wasn’t even around in the 1920s. 335 furnish their homes in 1920s paraphernalia. It is rare to see a pianist on the moldy fig circuit, male or female, who does not wear garters on their shirtsleeves (a style, incidentally, popularized in pre-World War I days by pianist-singer Tony Jackson), men who are not attired in ‘20s suits or tuxes with their hair parted in the middle, etc. One such couple of my acquaintance not only dress up like a flapper and her sheik at home, but actually move and walk in a fast, stiff, jerky manner like characters in a silent movie. They don’t seem to realize that the fast, jerky move- ments come from the film being run too fast in the projector. They think that people of that time actually moved like that. Some even insist on wall phones with cranks, crystal radio sets, and Model T Fords or Stutz-Bearcats. Even at the height of my infatuation with 1920s jazz, the 1960s, I never did any of these things, nor did the few people I knew who also liked some of that music.
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